Monday, August 25, the meeting of the Presidential Majority (MP), on the farm of the Head of State of the Democratic Republic of Congo, establishing the process to maintain the power of the latter, before the end of his second and final term in 2016 is no longer a question of a simple makeup of the Constitution, but a real project on drafting a new basic text to be approved by referendum.

The Rwandan government has expressed intentions to have former Congolese warlord Gen Laurent Nkunda released from a security detention facility to enable him return to his motherland.

Nkunda, who previously served as a high ranking officer in the Congolese army after the overthrow of President Mobutu, was arrested on January 22, 2009, during a meeting with Rwandan officers from the border town of Gisenyi.

The location of his detention centre remains unclear.

Chimpreports has learned that during a Security Council briefing at United Nations headquarters in New York, United States on July 7, Rwanda said DRC must put in place incentives and honour its international agreements to allow the return of rebels including Nkunda.

The incident was allegedly captured on video and posted on YouTube

The U.S. State Department has taken steps to seek the prosecution of a members of the President of the Democratic Republic of Congo’s entourage, who were allegedly captured on video Thursday beating a protester in the streets of Washington, D.C.

A video posted on YouTube shows a man in a dark suit kicking the head of a protester as he lays on the ground near a member of D.C.’s Metropolitan Police Department, who appeared to be trying to defuse the situation.